An 18-Year-Old Girl Died From a Synthetic Opioid She Bought Online. Here’s How Portland Police Cracked the Case.
An investigation leads to the deepest reaches of the internet.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate Monohydrate.
An investigation leads to the deepest reaches of the internet.
Nigel Jaquiss Willamette Week Jul 2017 15min Permalink
Africa’s most important economy now appears to function for the benefit of one powerful family—the Guptas.
Matthew Campbell, Franz Wild Bloomberg Businessweek Nov 2017 25min Permalink
The story of Edward Averill, a blind man with one foot who robbed a bank in Austin, Texas.
Ciara O'Rourke The Atavist Magazine Jan 2019 40min Permalink
With its cheap geothermal energy and low crime rate, Iceland has become the world’s leading miner of digital currency. Then the crypto-crooks showed up.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Nov 2019 20min Permalink
The moderators who keep Google and Youtube free of beheadings and child porn now have PTSD themselves.
Casey Newton The Verge Dec 2019 25min Permalink
It began with a series of anonymous sexual-harassment complaints that the writer knew were false. But the truth was far stranger.
Sarah Viren New York Times Magazine Mar 2020 35min Permalink
How a young talent from East London went from open-mic nights to making the most sublimely unsettling show of the year.
E. Alex Jung New York Jul 2020 30min Permalink
Adrian Hong says he leads a group of “freedom fighters” conducting a revolution. Has the U.S. already betrayed them?
Suki Kim New Yorker Nov 2020 35min Permalink
Genetic analysis of human remains found in the Himalayas has raised baffling questions about who these people were and why they were there.
Douglas Preston New Yorker Dec 2020 25min Permalink
Musicians are in peril, at the mercy of giant monopolies that profit off their work.
David Dayen The Prospect Mar 2021 30min Permalink
A spoiler-filled interview with the creator of The White Lotus.
Kathryn VanArendonk Vulture Aug 2021 20min Permalink
A global outpouring of generosity after the massacre in January has left the satirical magazine rich. Its leftist staffers have conflicted feelings about that.
Roger Cohen Vanity Fair Jul 2015 15min Permalink
Exposure to the internet did not make us into a nation of yeoman mind-farmers (unless you count Minecraft). That people in the billions would self-assemble, and that these assemblies could operate in their own best interests, was … optimistic.
If you were a U.S. prison warden trying to figure out how to kill people with an electric chair in the ‘80s, there was basically one guy to call. His name was Fred A. Leuchter Jr. He ran a business out of his house in the Boston suburbs, providing consulting or execution equipment to at least 27 states between 1979 and 1990. Some of Fred Leuchter’s equipment is still in use today, which is why I wanted to talk to him.
Paul Bowers Welcome To Hell World Jun 2021 Permalink
The author and Kamaran Najm co-founded a photo agency in Iraq and teamed up to document a new era in Kurdistan, a region with a long history of suffering. Then Kamaran was captured by ISIS.
Sebastian Meyer Guernica Mar 2020 25min Permalink
The rising Democratic star was found in a Miami Beach hotel with a male sex worker and suspected drugs. To keep their marriage together, he and his wife, R. Jai, had to embrace a new dynamic of “radical honesty” in their relationship.
Wesley Lowery GQ Jan 2021 Permalink
For years, a tactical police unit in Mount Vernon, New York, reigned with impunity—protecting drug dealers, planting evidence, brutalizing citizens. Then one of its own started covertly documenting the abuse.
George Joseph Esquire Mar 2021 20min Permalink
Undercover as a student at Phoenix University, the largest for-profit higher education company in the country and the second-largest enroller of students (behind the SUNY system), where only 12 percent of first-time students graduate and the ad budget accounts for 30 percent of overall spending.
Christopher R. Beha Harper's Oct 2011 Permalink
Bob Rodriguez, the oracular mutual fund manager with the best record over the last quarter century and two correctly-predicted crashes under his belt, says another spectacular crash is on its way within five years.
Mina Kimes Fortune Jun 2011 15min Permalink
“We are invited to listen, but never to truly join the narrative, for to speak as the slave would, to say that we are as happy for the Civil War as most Americans are for the Revolutionary War, is to rupture the narrative.”
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Nov 2011 15min Permalink
From 1968-1973, the three teenage Wiggin sisters, guided by a domineering father, played their strange music at New Hampshire ballrooms and recorded a single album. The Philosophy of the World LP goes for over $500 today, but the intervening decades have not been kind to the Wiggins.
Susan Orlean New Yorker Sep 1999 20min Permalink
Scenes of grief, from the sister of comedian Harris Wittels.
Stephanie Wittels Wachs Medium Jun 2015 15min Permalink
A collection of picks on the history, friends and foes of gay rights.
A young black gentrifier gets lumped in with both groups, often depending on what she’s wearing and where she’s drinking. She is always aware of that fact.
Shani O. Hilton Washington City Paper Mar 2011 30min Permalink
A profile of Robert Cade, a University of Florida professor and inventor of Gatorade.
Gilbert Rogin Sports Illustrated Jul 1968 25min Permalink